Tumor necrosis factor alpha sensitizes low epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-expressing carcinomas for anti-EGFR therapy.

  • M Hambek
  • C Solbach
  • H G Schnuerch
  • M Roller
  • M Stegmueller
  • A Sterner-Kock
  • J Kiefer
  • Rainald Knecht

Related Research units

Abstract

Analysis of 1,060 xenotransplants derived from cancer cell lines as wel as spontaneously occurring tumors from the larynx, pharynx, mammary gland, uterine cervix, and vulva revealed that tumor regression induced by treatment with monoclonal antibodies (EMD 55900 and EMD 72000 against the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) could be enhanced by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) treatment in vivo. Moreover, tumor that primarily do not respond to antibody treatment can be made suscep tible by additional TNF-alpha treatment. To investigate the in vivo effects of monoclonal antibodies, we treated tumors derived from cell lines (A431 and Detroit 562) as well as spontaneously occurring squamous cell carci nomas and adenocarcinomas (transplanted on NMRI-nu/nu mice) gener ally with EMD 55900 (40 microg/g mouse) and its humanized version EMD 72000 (40 microg/g mouse). When treated with EMD 55900 and EMD 72000 carcinomas with an EGFR concentration of > or = 70 fmol/mg protein showed significant reduction in tumor size compared with untreated controls. The degree of tumor regression correlated with the EGFR concentration of the tumor. In mice treated with TNF-alpha (0.5 microg/g mouse) and EMD 55900 72000 simultaneously, we observed enhanced antitumor effects up to complete tumor eradication. Carcinomas with an EGFR concentration

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number3
ISSN0008-5472
Publication statusPublished - 2001
pubmed 11221831